Microfinance organizations in Uzbekistan boosted total capital by 40% to 3.48 trillion soums ($288 million) in 2025, driven mainly by higher authorized capital and strong retained earnings.
Uzbekistan’s microfinance sector saw liabilities jump 54.7% in 2026, largely driven by increased borrowing and leasing, the Central Bank reports.
Rayyan Microfinance bank has announced the launch of N2 billion banking projects, aimed at supporting Micro, Small and Medium ...
The National Collective of Community Savings and Credit Services Providers organised the conference “Microfinance and Credit ...
Olympus Auditorium, Bandaranaike Centre for International Studies (BCIS) The National Collective of Community Savings and ...
For Saccos and microfinance institutions, accreditation has provided a pathway into the formal credit reporting ecosystem, ...
A Singaporean firm vows to put in all its resources as it entered into an agreement with the Credit Card Association of the ...
ANTWI If any man be of sound mind, then far it be from such a person to oppose the Bank of Ghana’s efforts to reform Ghana’s ...
For several years, the private sector has had cause to complain incessantly about sky-high lending rates in the banking ...
A few years ago, opening a bank account in Nigeria meant waking up early, standing in line, and filling out long forms. Today, it takes less than five minutes, and it all happens on your phone. From ...
Human Rights Watch argues that Cambodian microfinance institutions, backed by investors such as IFC, are targeting Indigenous communities with predatory lending and debt collection practices. Cambodia ...